Appy Halloween
Jackson Avenue is in the ipad spirit. The teachers dressed as their favorite app…
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Jackson Avenue is in the ipad spirit. The teachers dressed as their favorite app…
The Board and I are committed to listening to all of the constituents of the Mineola UFSD. We understand that we are in a consumer business and the customer is always right! To that end we have partnered with K-12 Insight to gather information from you. We recently launched a new section on our website called Your Voice Matters. We are using this portal to reach out to the community, hear your voices, and respond to your ideas. Below is a calendar for the year of the different ways we will be listening. Please make sure to participate in upcoming surveys or drop us a note so we can demonstrate our commitment to you, your children and this community.
Direct link- http://www.mineola.k12.ny.us/pages/Mineola_UFSD/District_Info/YourVoice
I recently came across the article Grand Test Auto (link below). It is a well written piece about the possible future of assessments. It describes a current prototype of an assessment on fractions that takes place as students play a video game. Very interesting read!
I am reminded of the final scene from Rocky 3 when Apollo redeems ‘his favor’ from Rocky. He said- “I lost by one second Rock, I have a hard time processing that” of course then he goes on to come out of retirement in Rocky 4 presumably because he beat the champ in that unofficial bout. I agree with Apollo- I have a hard time processing that our Marching Band ‘lost’ by .05 points. That one is too close to call! Congratulations to our Band for another fantastic showing in Syracuse. The subjectively of such a close point total doesn’t diminish the wonderful season you all had. I am proud that you represent our school and community with grace and dignity.
Mineola High School recently announced the top students in the graduating class .. Listed below are this year’s top achievers, who I have to admit, impress me on an almost daily basis. All well-deserving of the honor:
In case you missed this editorial. The County assessor office tells the public to call his/her school district to expalin why their bill is more than the 2.18% voted on by the community. They control the assessments.
Newsday Editorial October 9, 2013 Mangano, taxes and the fun house mirror
Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano didn’t raise property taxes this year, but in the fun-house mirror that is the county assessment system, that picture is just a little skewed. Mangano’s efforts to deal with the county’s problems has resulted in higher tax bills for some property owners in order to balance the lower bills of others.
Mangano is under attack because tax bills being mailed now hold unpleasant surprises for homeowners who haven’t grieved their assessments recently. Their bills went up in every category, but it’s the school tax portion, at about 70 percent of most people’s total, that really startles.
School districts are operating under a 2 percent cap on annual tax hikes. That limit can be exceeded only with the approval of 60 percent of voters, and 55 out of 56 Nassau school districts stayed within the cap this year. But the average tax rate — the amount of money owed for each dollar of property value you own — went up about 7 percent this year. Overall, it’s up 20 percent over the past two years.
In almost every school district, the tax increase approved by voters last spring is responsible for less than one-third of the rate increase this year. That rate went up in districts because the total taxable value of the property in those districts has declined. That’s mostly because about 240,000 Nassau homeowners grieved their assessments over the past two years, and about 85 percent of them got a decrease in the value of their property.
Imagine you and your neighbor are an entire school district. Your houses are both worth $100,000, you each pay $10,000 per year in school taxes, or a rate of 10 percent. So the district has a total of $200,000 in taxable property and gets $20,000 in revenue from you and your neighbor. But you answered one of those solicitations from a company hounding you to challenge the claim that your house is really worth $100,000. You win, and your assessment gets cut to $60,000. The assessed value of property in the district suddenly goes down to $160,000, but the school still needs to collect the $20,000. So the tax rate increases to 12.5 percent. Your taxes drop to $7,500 and your neighbor makes up the difference. His bill increases 25 percent, to $12,500.
So, Mangano says he hasn’t raised county taxes, and he hasn’t. But steps he’s taken have led to higher bills for many residents.
To deal with the assessment monster, he decided to settle assessment grievances before tax rolls are finalized. Why? So Nassau wouldn’t have to refund overpayments to school districts and municipalities — a law known as the county guarantee — because the county made mistakes in assessments. His approach on settling grievances has saved Nassau about $60 million over the past two years, officials say, and eased some of the pressures on his budgets, which made it easier for him to hold the line on taxes. And while the percentage of assessment grievances approved is quite high, there’s no evidence they were without merit.
Mangano encourages homeowners to grieve their taxes, and the big winners are the lawyers who send the solicitation letters. The success of such a high percentage of claims, however, has caused large increases in the tax bills of residents who didn’t challenge their assessments. And the county tax burden, instead of being spread around evenly as it would have been if the county had passed a small tax increase, now falls most heavily on those who didn’t play the grievance game.
John Lusardi can hit a golf ball a long way and Chris Fischer didn’t really hit a bad shot- but that didn’t stop Coach Weidlein and I from winning the match! Yesterday it was my pleasure to join the golf team’s practice round at North Shore Country club. John challenged me to a match last year and we finally made it happen. We played a best ball scramble, after 7 holes the match was dormie and we pressed the final two holes. We won press too! Coach carried me most round, if I had to play John straight up I am sure I wouldn’t fair as well. Beautiful day, wonderful course. Can’t wait for the rematch